This post was originally published on the freenode website.


On November 22nd, 2016, the Fedora Project released Fedora 25, the latest and greatest version of our Linux-based operating system. For over thirteen years, the Fedora community has worked to bring the leading edge of open source development to the world. Fedora’s focus is guided by its Four Foundations: Freedom, Friends, Features, First. Freedom is representative of Fedora’s commitment to championing free and open source software and contributing back to upstream projects for the benefit of the open source community. Features stands for Fedora’s commitment to driving some of the newest features First. Some of these examples include the Wayland display server, systemd, and GNOME 3. Perhaps most importantly, Friends are for the friendships made by contributors from around the world who help make every release of Fedora possible. Part of why Friends is an important part of the Four Foundations is communication. Fedora community members come from all over the planet, including six out of seven continents. The tools we use to communicate help us collaborate, solve problems, and build friendships. IRC and freenode are an important part of how we communicate. Fedora registered our first channel on freenode on December 29, 2002. As we celebrate thirteen years of open source collaboration and the newest release of Fedora 25, the Fedora community wanted to reflect on our longstanding relationship with freenode.

How Fedora uses freenode

As a large open source project, there are many different teams and sub-projects in Fedora that help move us toward a new release. Just like there are many parts to a car’s engine, there are many parts to Fedora’s engine. Some of these groups are officially recognized sub-projects like the Design team, Community Operations, or Docs team. Other times, they are informal Special Interest Groups (SIGs) that bring contributors together to focus on specific topics like programming languages or desktop environments, like the Python SIG or KDE SIG. Usually, each of these groups or teams will have their own IRC channel to coordinate in. The Design team uses #fedora-design, the Python SIG uses #fedora-python… and so on. In total, Fedora has over 175 registered channels to its name. Frequently, teams will hold public meetings in the freenode channels to work through tickets, plan ahead on upcoming tasks, or discuss important topics for their team. There are a series of special meeting channels used for this purpose. Using the MeetBot plugin, Fedora uses our own zodbot to help run meetings, mark up links or important ideas, and create a pretty HTML summary at the end of the meeting. All of these summaries and full logs are found at meetbot.fedoraproject.org.

Tips to using IRC effectively

There are countless different workflows, IRC clients, and handy plugins available to customize the IRC experience. In the spirit of the Friends Foundation and the Code of Conduct, Fedora contributors are encouraged to always be excellent to one another. It’s important to follow good manners in any IRC channel, Fedora or any other. Having good manners in IRC are as important as it is in real life. Be courteous to others, and if in doubt, it’s good to assume the best intentions by others. IRC is important for Fedora, and many contributors have put together guides of our own as well. You can read more tips from the Fedora team in our IRC Beginner’s Guide on the Fedora Magazine.

What’s next for Fedora?

As 2016 comes to an end, we’re wrapping up on our own new release of Fedora 25. The Fedora community is looking forward to helping drive open source innovation and contributing to the Linux community for many years to come. Fedora currently has more than 2,000 contributors, and in the tenth percentile of active contributors, 65% of them are from the community (State of Fedora, Flock 2016). The Fedora steam engine is chugging ahead, and we’re excited to see where it takes us next. We’re happy to be able to have shared past, current, and future milestones together with the freenode community. Keep an eye out for Fedora Ambassadors in Europe during DevConf and FOSDEM. You can also find us in North America at BrickHack 2017. And there will be more events all through the year you can keep an eye out for us at!